@rakovsky : The boxed pouch in the photo is probably from the early 1970s. I read someplace that the trade name, “House of Edgeworth” which appears on this box, was phased out in 1974, but I’m no historian. My dad stopped smoking in 1976 or 1977 so it definitely predates that.
If it's saying House of Edgeworth, it's from before Lane took it over. I don't recall exactly when that transition to Lane's brand happened.
Thanks for the condolences, dad passed away 15 years ago so the grief is long passed but I do miss him and enjoy using his old piping gear.
Yeah, having Dads back is better than having piping gear. I think about my grandfather and dream about him sometimes. In the dreams it feels like I'm staying in his house. My Mom has those kinds of dreams about her parents too.
I keep a selection of around eight or so old “codger blend” matches in 2 to 4 ounce bags on hand. I store the bags in the same air-tight container as my cherry aromatics and the zip-lock bags all smell of cherry, which makes it hard to get too nuanced about the smell of the tobacco before the pipe gets loaded.
I keep my chocolate-smelling tobaccos in the same glass jam jar. One piper told me that the best thing to do is to get little mason jars, one for each blend. Hardware stores around me sell big boxes of ~12 ctup-sized mason jars for ~$10-20 each. It's just more mason jars than I want, so I never got them and just divided my blends up among jam and tomato sauce jars based on common flavors (Englishes, Cherry, Chocolate, VAs, etc.)
Alot of them are in Mylar bags, so the flavor is kind of sealed in OK.
If you smoke your codger blends and it gets a cherry note, then it's not bad for two reasons- cherry is a good flavor, and you can just mentally subtract the cherry smell from the non-cherry codgers' smell.
Personally I recommend you put the chocolate ones like PA/Edgeworth into the same jam/tomato sauce jar because those jars are cheap and Edgeworth is such a special antique classic blend at this point in history, so it's better to preserve the flavor.
But it's up to you. Piping as a hobby should be about enjoying yourself rather than getting OCD about making everything perfect. You could even say that you like a cherry-chocolate smell overlap.
It was three degrees below zero when I walked the dog this morning so I’m not likely to light up a pipe today or until it warms up a bit (I only smoke outside), otherwise I’d fire up a bowl of the Edgeworth match and describe it. Your description sounds about right though. I tend to get that chocolaty taste more toward the latter half of the bowls.
I know what you mean about avoiding smoking outside when it's so cold. Can you smoke while you walk the dog? Are there cigar lounges in Anchorage?
Original Edgeworth by Larus Brothers like you have is a classic famous blend that Grabow used to pre-smoke their pipes with and the US or US diplomats gave to J. Stalin or the USSR in WW2 during the Lend Lease era. Since you are in Alaska, I'll put this here because it's an example of what I mean:
I think that the statue is cooler looking with the snow on it.
This super-sized statue is the only public memorial to the deal that ended America's neutrality during World War II.
www.atlasobscura.com
People into piping history love the original Edgeworth brand:
Since I never had it, I just have descriptions of it. Reviewers tend to think
Lane's Edgeworth RR is closer to the original Larus Edgeworth, but some like Jim Inks think that
Sutliff's "RR MATCH" is closer.
Lane's Edgeworth RR used to say Edgeworth, but then probably due to copyright issues they dropped the Edgeworth part of the name. Then in the 2010's Lane discontinued theirs altogether. A piper on the Speak EZ forum sent me a sample of 1990's Lane's RR and it came pretty dry in a solid mylar pouch, with a light sweet prune smell. I figured it needed hydrating, so I flicked a couple boiled filtered water drops in the bag, and it got overly moist, like the skins on prunes in a grocery store cardboard prune box. The smell made me imagine pipe smokers at poker tables, probably because Grabow has a spade symbol on its pipes.
I didn't really pick up a chocolate smell on my sample of Lane's RR. But when
@JimInks here reviewed Lane's RR, he found it to be so goopy with chocolate topping that he considered it to be significantly different.
In contrast, when I got a bag of
Sutliff's RR MATCH from 4Noggins, it came in a seethrough bag and smelled very much like cocoa puffs. One piper titled their review for the blend "Sutliff's RR MATCH = Box of Cocoa Puffs."
I'm not necessarily saying that negatively. I like cocoa puffs fine. It's better with milk and I've found the two chocolate blends I've smoked like S.G. Chocolate Flake to be better with milk.
But rather what I'm curious about this is whether the tin note when you open a pouch of Edgeworth also has a strong cocoa puffs smell?
I thought PA has a chocolate smell, but it was maybe half as strong as the Sutliff RR tin note.
I’ve considered doing a 50 year comparison between the old box and the modern match. I’d have to rehydrate the old version and it will obviously be significantly changed from what it was intended to be, so it would just be a pointless exercise in messing around with tobacco,
I really don't consider doing the test to be pointless due to age.
Tobacco is like wine, MREs, or crackers in that when it's made and packed it's normally intended to last, and this applies to tobacco sent to the USSR in WW2. US foodstuffs and supplies to the USSR were meant to last in adverse conditions like cold and lack of refrigeration- boots, canned spam, Ford Trucks. Just thinking about this makes me want to play one of those WW2 videogames like Men of War AS2 where you get to use US Lend Lease equipment.
Unless it's moldy, the tobacco hasn't gone bad in my view. On top of that, a lot of pipers count a lot of cellared/properly stored tobacco to be better for their tastes. Cherokee Black is an example that comes to mind.
I would recommend smoking it dry and rehydrated on different occasions. Some pipers even prefer their tobacco to be very dry. Personally I smoked Wellauer's English blend and Germain's #7 when they were crispy dry like they came to me, and they were OK that way. I rehydrated them and found them to be better after rehydration. The danger with rehydration I think is that you could get mold to show up like what happened to me with some Indonesian stuff, so I think it might be better to rehydrate very old tobacco only one part at a time. At least, that's my own plan for rehydrating old tobacco if I have enough of it in the future.